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Scarborough Voyage Tips and guide

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For other places with the same name, see Scarborough (disambiguation).

    Scarborough is a large resort on the North Yorkshire coast in the north of England; it had a population of almost 62,000 in 2011. It has two broad, sandy bays divided by a headland, with confident Victorian hotels ranged above.

    Understand

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    A castle was established on the headland in the Norman era, and the town first grew up along the more sheltered South Bay. There was fishing and sea trade, but it wasn't much of a harbour, and Scarborough mostly owes its existence to the strange course of the River Derwent. This arises nearby, but instead of flowing to the coast it turns inland, carving a broad valley between the North York Moors and the Yorkshire Wolds. So this was a natural transport route: for traders heading to Scarborough Fair, for marauding armies including the Normans, Scots and Royalists alternating with Parliamentarians, and above all for holiday-makers. In 1626 one of the springs that bubbled out of the cliffs, staining the rocks with its mineral content, was claimed to have medicinal properties. People flocked for spa cures, from the springs and from sea-bathing. The railway arrived in 1845 and there was a spate of building grand hotels, expanding into North Bay and creating the townscape you see today. Leisure fashions have evolved but Scarborough remains a popular resort because of its ease of access from the industrial cities.

    Get in

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    By road

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    All routes to Scarborough get very congested on summer weekends. The main approach is along A64, which forks off A1(M) to pass York and Malton. Expect to hit tailbacks just east of York where the dual carriageway narrows to single.

    Other routes are to leave A64 at York for A166 via Stamford Bridge and Bridlington; along A170 (for light vehicles only) from Thirsk and Pickering; from eastern England either via M18 then A614 or via Humber Bridge, Hull and A165; and from the north use A19 past Middlesbrough onto A171 then along the coast through Whitby.

    Tune in to This is the Coast on DAB radio for travel reports to confirm that what you are stuck in is indeed a traffic jam.

    Parking in town centre is ample much of the year but fills up quickly in summer. For day trips use the Park and Rides, both south side: on A64 Seamer Road and on A165 Filey Road.

    By train

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    TransPennine Express trains run hourly from Liverpool Lime Street via Manchester Victoria, Leeds, York and Malton to Scarborough. From London and the south, change at York. Reservations are needed for bicycles.

    Northern Rail trains run every two hours from Hull via Beverley, Bridlington, Bempton (for Flamborough Head) and Filey to Scarborough.

    On summer weekends these trains are packed with families heading to the seaside.

    1 Scarborough station is next to the main bus stand in West Square. It has a staffed ticket office and machines, a waiting room and toilets. Lots of cafes nearby. There is step-free access to all platforms.

    By bus

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    The National Express direct from London Victoria has been axed: travel to Leeds and take the Coastliner, 10 hours in all.

    The Yorkshire Coastliner 843 runs hourly from Leeds via Tadcaster, York and Malton to Scarborough.

    East Yorkshire Bus 121 runs every two hours from Hull via Beverley and Driffield to Bridlington. Change there for the hourly 12 / 13 via Filey to Scarborough.

    East Yorkshire Bus 128 runs across the North York Moors from Helmsley via Pickering, Thornton-le-Dale, Brompton and Seamer to Scarborough. It runs hourly M-F, every two hours Sa, no Sunday service.

    Arriva Bus X93 runs hourly from Middlesbrough via Guisborough and Whitby to Scarborough.

    Get around

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    The town is a few miles long, but walk wherever possible.

    The Tramway is a funicular, plying between St Nicholas St and the South Bay seafront, all of 248 feet / 76 m. Opened in 1881, it runs daily 10AM-5PM, adult fare £1.20 up and £1 down.

    Open-top buses ply along the seafront between The Spa in South Bay and The Sands in North Bay. They run Apr-Oct daily every 15 min to 6:30PM or later. An adult day ticket is £5, child and concs £3.

    The bus south to Filey gets you to Cayton Bay, and the bus north to Whitby gets you to Robin Hood's Bay, see Get in. But most of their route lies a mile or two inland, with limited access to the clifftop footpath.

    Taxi firms ainclude Beeline ( +44 1723 366666), Station Taxis ( +44 1723 366366), Betty's ( +44 1723 500190) and Boro Cars ( +44 1723 361111).

    See

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    Scarborough Castle
    • 1 Scarborough Castle, Castle Road YO11 1HY, +44 1723 372451. Daily 10AM-5PM. It's well smashed up, but it's scenically perched on the headland dividing the two bays, and has been a fort since prehistoric times. Much of the ruin is medieval, but it was in use into modern times, and shelled by German warships in 1914. Adult £8.70, child £5.20, conc £7.90. Scarborough Castle (Q1963850) on Wikidata Scarborough Castle on Wikipedia
    • St Mary's Church, Parish House, 158 Castle Rd YO11 1TH, +44 1723 500541. This Anglican church is next to the castle, which meant that the Norman / medieval building was wrecked during the Civil War assault on the castle. It was rebuilt in the 17th century and reduced in size during the 19th. In that era, Anne Brontë worked as governess to the Robinson family of Thorp Green near York, and accompanied them on annual holidays to Scarborough. She used its settings in Agnes Grey, and for the fictional village of "Linden-Car" in The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. When her health failed in 1849, she returned to Scarborough in hopes of a cure but died aged 29 and was buried here. Her grave is in the northern end of the churchyard. Free. St Mary's Church (Q17526167) on Wikidata St Mary's Church, Scarborough on Wikipedia
    • 2 The Harbour is at the north end of South Bay, sheltered by the castle headland from nor'easterly weather. There's a small lighthouse, really just a harbour light, and Luna Park funfair at the east pier end.
    • 3 St Martin-on-the-Hill, completed in 1863, is the attractive High Anglican church on Albion Road. Panels around the pulpit are by the Pre-Raphaelites.
    • 4 Peasholm Park is in a glen opening onto North Bay; always open, free, dogs on leads welcome. It has Japanese-themed gardens, a pagoda and a boating lake. A mock naval battle is staged on the lake June Sa, July Th Sa, Aug M Th Sa; adult £4.50, child £2.50.
    • The Italian Gardens and Rose Garden by the Esplanade overlook South Bay. Some 300 yards south, the grassy bank was the site of the Holbeck Hall Hotel. Many places along this eroded coast have fallen into the sea but this hotel spectacularly did so live on TV news in 1993. The cause was not coastal erosion, but heavy rain liquidising the subsoil, which landslipped. The spot is marked by an information board plus a poignant caption on Google Map: "add a missing place".
    • 5 Scarborough Art Gallery is in an Italianate villa on The Crescent. Rotating art exhibits, there isn't a permanent collection. It's open Tu-Su 10AM-5PM, adult £3 includes The Rotunda.
    • The Rotunda 100 yards east on Vernon Road was built in 1829 to display the geology collection of William Smith, who realised one could correlate geological strata by the fossils they contain. open Tu-Su 10AM-5PM, adult £3 includes the Art Gallery.
    • 6 Oliver's Mount. This ridge at the south edge of town is a peaceful strolling spot for views over the town, except on race days. It's a motorbike race track of 2.41 miles (3.88 km), with events staged July-Sept. Oliver's Mount (Q7087358) on Wikidata Oliver's Mount on Wikipedia
    • 7 Scalby Beck or The Sea Cut is a partly artificial channel to manage the flow of the River Derwent. This arises in the North York Moors close to the North Sea, but its direct course was blocked by Ice Age mud deposits, so for the last 11,000 years or so it's flowed inland — the River Niger of Yorkshire, with Malton as its Timbuktu. The Derwent has 70 miles (110 km) to flow to reach the tidal Humber with only 135 ft (41 m) to fall, so it's flood-prone. A channel was completed in 1804 to divert water from its upper reaches into the natural Scalby Beck. There are paths along its length.
    • 8 Forge Valley Woods are in the Derwent Valley below the Sea Cut intake. Some of the woodland is 6000 years old. The woods were formerly used for charcoal to fire forges, hence the name, but are now protected as a National Nature Reserve.
    • Robin Hood's Bay: see Whitby for this picturesque harbour, and for the oddity of Ravenscar, a Victorian attempt to create a beach resort out of a disused alum factory that lacked a beach.

    Do

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    Anne Brontës' grave
    • Beaches: South Bay has amusement arcades, a funfair, the harbour, the Spa complex, donkey rides, and all the trappings of a traditional English seaside resort. North Bay, the other side of the castle headland, is quieter and less developed. Both are sandy, and almost completely covered at high tide.
    • Stephen Joseph Theatre, Westborough YO11 1JW (opposite railway station), +44 1723 370541. Stephen Joseph was the mentor of the prolific playwright and theatre director Sir Alan Ayckbourn. Born in 1939, Ayckbourn lives locally; he retired as artistic director in 2008 but continues to premier his own work here. The latest, number 80 in the canon, was Anno Domini in 2020. The theatre also puts on other new writing, rep, and occasionally film. Stephen Joseph Theatre (Q2344829) on Wikidata Stephen Joseph Theatre on Wikipedia
    • Scarborough Spa is a music and events venue on South Shore.
    • 1 Sea Life Centre, Scalby Mills Rd YO12 6RP, +44 1723 373414. Daily 10AM-5PM. Various aquarium habitats, with talks and interaction pools. Adult £15.20, child £13.20.
    • Open Air Theatre on North Bay, with a capacity of 8000, puts on big-name concerts in summer; bring your waterproofs.
    • North Bay Railway[dead link] is a 20 inch gauge railway: trains chunter for most of a mile between Peasholm Park and the Sea Life Centre at Scalby Mills. Four locomotives are "outline" or mock-steam, but with diesel-hydraulic power units. In 2016 a true steam locomotive came into service, the 0-4-0 Georgina. Trains run Easter-Oct every 20-30 min, adult day pass £4.20, child £3.20.
    • 2 Alpamare Waterpark, 28 Burniston Rd YO12 6PH, +44 1723 861431. M-Sa 10AM-10PM, Su 10AM-9PM. Waterpark with heated pool and tube-rides, also a spa. Adult £21, child £17.
    • 3 North Yorkshire Water Park, Wykeham Lakes, Long Causeway Rd YO13 9QU (6 miles west of town off A170), +44 1723 865052. Apr-Oct: daily 8AM-6PM. Lagoon with floating slides, kayaking, paddle-boarding and so on.
    • Golf: North Cliff GC is near the Sea Life Centre, and South Cliff GC is on Oliver's Mount.
    • 4 Cayton Bay five miles south of town has a broad sandy beach. It's the main spot for surfing, wind-surfing and the like.
    • Walk: The Cleveland Way follows a 110-mile loop (175-km) from Helmsley round the rim of the North York Moors through Osmotherley, Guisborough, Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Whitby, Scarborough and Filey. The sections near Scarborough all follow the coast and are obvious: north along the cliffs to Scalby, Ravenscar and Robin Hood's Bay, or south along the beach (covered at high tide) then cliffs via Cayton Bay to Filey Brigg and town.
    • The Cinder Track is the old railway between Scarborough and Whitby. It's suitable for walking, cycling and horse-riding. It winds along the contours a mile or two inland so it has limited sea views but is level going.
    • Cricket: the cricket ground is on North Marine Road near Peasholm Park. Scarborough CC play in the Yorkshire Premier League North, and Yorkshire CCC occasionally play here.
    • Football: Scarborough Athletic play away down in the lower tiers of English soccer. Their home ground is Flamingoland Stadium (capacity 2833) on Ashburn Rd a mile south of the railway station.
    • Goldwing Light Parade is an evening parade of garishly-lit Goldwing motorbikes, fundraising for charity. The last is on Saturday 9 September 2023.
    • Scarborough Pride parade was last held on Saturday 30 Sep 2023.

    Buy

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    Scarborough Fair

    "Tell her to make me a cambric shirt / without a seam or needlework...." — the lyric of "Scarborough Fair" probably dates to 17th century. The singer is setting his ex-lover a series of impossible tasks, so there's bitterness and estrangement at the core of it. Its best-known recording was in 1965 by Simon & Garfunkel, interwoven with the anti-war song "Canticle". The real Scarborough Fair was held 1253-1788 from mid-August through September, an unusually extended event, which as well as markets involved amusements and amenities, and time enough to kindle a love affair then bitterly fall out. From time to time there are attempts to revive the Fair, at least in name, but to date they've been defeated by the realities of modern retail and leisure patterns.

    • Scarborough Rock, anywhere along the prom.
    • Tesco next to the railway station is open M-Sa 6AM-midnight, Su 10AM-4PM.
    • The main retail strip is south edge of town, along Seamer Rd A64, with a Lidl supermarket.
    • Market Hall near West Pier is trading M-Sa 8AM-5PM.

    Eat

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    • Harbour Bar, 1 Sandside YO11 1PE (at West Pier). Daily 8:30AM-5PM. A popular ice-cream parlour and coffee shop in 1950s retro style.
    • Lookout on the Pier - on West Pier to be specific - serves seafood daily 7:30AM-4:30PM.
    • Roasters, 8 Aberdeen Walk YO11 1XP. M-Sa 8AM-7PM, Su 9AM-4PM. Pleasant cafe near NCP Balmoral car park.
    • Farrer's serves hearty trad fare within the Spa, open F-W 9AM-10:30PM, Th 9AM-6PM.
    • Embers earns great reviews. It's at 138 Victoria Rd a block back from the railway station, open W-F 5-9PM, Sa noon-3AM.
    • Mother Hubbards, 43 Westborough YO11 1UN, +44 1723 376109. M-Sa 11:30AM-6PM. Roomy, slick fish and chips restaurant, licensed, non-fish alternatives available.
    • Wackers, 1 Vernon Rd YO11 2NH. M-Sa 9AM-6PM, Su 11AM-5PM. Long-established place, reliably good fish and chips.
    • Cafe Fish, 19 York Place YO11 2NP, +44 1723 500301. Daily 5:30-10PM. Small seafood restaurant, licensed, not your average chipper.
    • Smallfry, 52 North Street YO11 1DE (behind Post Office). Tu-F 11:30AM-2PM, 4:15-7:15PM, Sa 11:30AM-2PM. Good fish & chips, small eat-in or takeaway.
    • Lanterna, 33 Queen Street YO11 1HQ, +44 1723 363616. Tu-Sa 7-9:30PM. Long-established trattoria, great cuisine, a cut above your standard pizzeria.
    • Florios Pizzeria, 35 Aberdeen Walk YO11 1BD, +44 1723 351124. W-M 5-9PM. Popular spot for pizza and pasta.
    • Scarborough Tandoori, 50 St Thomas Street YO11 1DR, +44 1723 352393. Daily 5PM-midnight. Extensive menu, good food.

    Drink

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    "A somewhat eccentric national treasure"

    That was the received wisdom about Jimmy Savile when he died in 2011, ripe in years and garlanded with fame and honours. He was buried in Woodland Cemetery in Scarborough with the coffin inclined at 45 degrees "to see the sea". He'd been a miner, wrestler, DJ, marathon runner, indefatigable fundraiser for charity, and all-round larger-than-life character. "Don't you know who I am?" — that was one phrase that had silenced his victims, and those who had sought to raise concern. The story first broke some months after his death, when the BBC suppressed an investigative report on his behaviour. ITV then broadcast claims of abuse by 10 women, very young girls at the time, which led to a deluge of cases, with over 200 proven victims. Savile had preyed on young girls throughout his stage and TV career, and used his charity work to access vulnerable girls at Stoke Mandeville Hospital and elsewhere. In 2014 he was denounced in Parliament as "a callous, opportunistic, wicked predator".

    Scarborough is reckoned to have the most pubs per capita in Britain, 170 across the district and dozens in town centre. This competition keeps prices down.

    • Indigo Alley, 4 North Marine Rd YO12 7PD. Quirky CAMRA-recommended pub, has live music. Serves fish & chips W-Su 4-8PM.
    • The Rooftop overlooking the harbour is open daily 10:30AM-10PM.
    • The Cask Inn, Cambridge Terr YO11 2LQ (south end of Valley Bridge). Daily noon-11:30PM. Dog-friendly pub, does excellent bar meals.
    • Tap & Spile, 94 Falsgrave Rd YO12 5AZ. M-F 4PM-midnight, Sa noon-midnight, Su noon-11PM. Friendly pub with live music. Dogs welcome in the Tap room. Meals Sunday lunchtime only.
    • The Lord Rosebery is a JD Wetherspoon opposite the railway station, open Su-Th 8AM-midnight, F Sa 8AM-2AM.
    • Yorkshire Spirit Malt Whisky is distilled at nearby Hunmanby, and first went on sale in 2019. See Filey for distillery tours.

    Sleep

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    Cliffs of North Bay

    There are more hotels and small B&Bs than you could shake a stick at. Supply usually well exceeds demand.

    • 1 Scarborough Camping & Caravan Site, Field Lane, Burniston Rd YO13 0DA (on A165), +44 1723 366212. The site is open Apr-Oct. Facilities such as cafe, laundry and play area are closed in 2020 season. Caravan or 2-person tent £40 per night.
    • 2 Scarborough Youth Hostel, Burniston Road YO13 0DA (on A165), +44 1723 361176. Built in 17th century as a watermill on Scalby Beck, the hostel has 46 beds in 4- and 6-bedded dorms.
    • 3 The Paragon, 123 Queen's Parade YO12 7HY, +44 1723 372676. Friendly well-run B&B above North Bay. Free parking. B&B double £75.
    • Bike & Boot Inn, Cliff Bridge Terrace YO11 2HA (by Rotunda), +44 1723 655555. Dog-friendly budget hotel by South Shore. B&B double £75.
    • Argo Guest House, 134 North Marine Rd YO12 7HZ (opposite Paragon), +44 1723 375745. Simple friendly B&B, good value for money. B&B double £65.
    • 4 Red Lea Hotel, Prince of Wales Terrace YO11 2AJ, +44 1723 362431. Clean, welcoming hotel above South Bay. They also have self-catering apartments. Red Lea is within the same building as the dowdy Redcliffe Hotel, but separately run. B&B double £90.
    • 5 Park Manor Hotel, Northstead Manor Drive YO12 6BB, +44 1723 372090, . Decent mid-range hotel by Peasholm Park. B&B double £130.
    • Premier Inn are a reliable well-run chain. They have two places near town centre: South Bay on Falconers Rd YO11 2EN, and North Bay at 26 Burnieston Road YO12 6PH. Rates in 2020 were around £80 per double room plus £10 pp for breakfast.
    North Bay Railway
    • 6 Travelodge, St Nicholas Cliff YO11 2EU, +44 871 984 6430. Budget chain hotel in town centre on South Bay. Some rooms and amenities tired or needing a clean, but most visitors have a comfy state. No hotel parking, unload and use the NCP. B&B double £120.
    • Phoenix Court, 8-9 Rutland Terrace YO12 7JB (next to St Mary's church), +44 1723 501150. Comfy welcoming B&B looking over North Bay. B&B double £60.
    • 7 Clifton Hotel, Queen's Parade, North Bay Promenade YO12 7HX, +44 1723 372489. Budget hotel in Britannia chain, gets very mixed reviews for quality of rooms and service. The poet Wilfred Owen stayed here. B&B double £50. Clifton Hotel (Q5133253) on Wikidata Clifton Hotel (England) on Wikipedia
    • 8 Crown Spa Scarborough, 7 Esplanade YO11 2AG, +44 1723 357400. Hotel and spa built in 1844, looking onto South Bay. Occasional glitches but most reviewers have a comfortable stay. B&B double £110. Crown Spa Hotel (Q5189463) on Wikidata Crown Spa Hotel on Wikipedia
    • 9 Royal Hotel, St Nicholas St YO11 2HE, +44 871 221 0208. It's seen better days. Run by Britannia, this is a budget offering, with indifferent service, decor and catering. B&B double £50.
    • 10 The Windmill, Mill St YO11 1SZ, +44 1723 372735. Delightful little B&B in an 18th-century windmill on the hill above the railway station. Two apartments within the mill tower sleep 2 adults only: 15 steps to lower (the larger), 38 steps to upper (with views). Plus self-catering cottages. No dogs. B&B double £100.
    • 11 Wrea Head Hall, Barmoor Lane, Scalby YO13 0PB (2 miles north of town), +44 1723 356773. Upscale country house hotel in Gothic mansion of 1881, refurbished in 2018. B&B double £150.
    • The Falcon Inn on the road north to Whitby re-opens in March 2024.

    Connect

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    Scarborough and its environs and approach roads have a good mobile and 4G signal from all UK carriers. As of July 2020, 5G has not reached this area.

    Go next

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    • North past Robin Hood's Bay is Whitby, an attractive fishing harbour with a ruined abbey and a Gothic history, thanks to Dracula.
    • The North York Moors rise inland. Pickering has a well-preserved castle, and steam trains ply across the moors towards Whitby. Rievaulx Abbey is nearby.
    • South is Filey where you can walk out to sea along the Brigg, and walk back again unless you've been careless about tide times. Further south are the magnificent cliffs of Flamborough Head, then the pleasant resort of Bridlington.
    • Malton has several nearby historic buildings; the standout is Castle Howard.
    • Brontë Country: other sites associated with the Brontë sisters are mostly around Haworth in West Yorkshire.


    Routes through Scarborough
    York Malton  SW  NE  END
    Kingston upon HullFiley  S  N  END
    Thirsk Pickering  W  E  END
    END  S  N  WhitbyMiddlesbrough



    This city travel guide to Scarborough is a usable article. It has information on how to get there and on restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.


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